Rebels hand over MH17 black boxes

July 22, 2014 00:00

DONETSK, Ukraine - Rebels controlling the crash site of Malaysian flight MH17 on Tuesday handed over the plane's black boxes, and declared a localised truce to allow international experts full access to the forensic minefield in east Ukraine.

Dutch investigators leading a probe into the disaster were preparing to take charge of the bodies of 280 victims set to arrive by train in the government-controlled city of Kharkiv.

The remains are to be taken to the Netherlands which had 193 citizens on board when the flight went down on Thursday, a disaster that has taken Ukraine's bloody three-month conflict to the doorstep of countries as far away as Malaysia and Australia.

Pro-Russian separatists -- who stand accused of downing the aircraft, possibly with a missile supplied by Moscow -- conceded to a furious international clamour for the bodies and black boxes to be released to investigators.

The rebel concessions came as European foreign ministers were to meet in Brussels to weigh possible new sanctions against Russia for its perceived support of the insurgency rocking ex-Soviet Ukraine.

Both black boxes, which record cockpit activity and flight data, were handed to Malaysian officials by the prime minister of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic, Alexander Borodai, in front of scores of journalists.

AFP

Dutch investigators leading a probe into the disaster were preparing to take charge of the bodies of 280 victims set to arrive by train in the government-controlled city of Kharkiv.

The remains are to be taken to the Netherlands which had 193 citizens on board when the flight went down on Thursday, a disaster that has taken Ukraine's bloody three-month conflict to the doorstep of countries as far away as Malaysia and Australia.

Pro-Russian separatists -- who stand accused of downing the aircraft, possibly with a missile supplied by Moscow -- conceded to a furious international clamour for the bodies and black boxes to be released to investigators.

The rebel concessions came as European foreign ministers were to meet in Brussels to weigh possible new sanctions against Russia for its perceived support of the insurgency rocking ex-Soviet Ukraine.

Both black boxes, which record cockpit activity and flight data, were handed to Malaysian officials by the prime minister of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic, Alexander Borodai, in front of scores of journalists.